Autism and Classical Myth

Susan Deacy

Friday, 25 May 2018

To do good in the world: Hercules, autism and being prepared

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I said in my previous posting that it doesn't need to be clear where serious work begins and play ends. Here I say more about the ex...
Thursday, 17 May 2018

'When you come to a fork in the road, take it' - A Choice of Hercules workshop at Life is Cool, a café managed by autistic people in Warsaw

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I had been a little concerned that the paper I was to deliver in Warsaw yesterday was a little out there. It is Herculean. It runs with th...
Wednesday, 9 May 2018

Awarded Top 30 Mythology Blog & who reads this blog?

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I’ll be off soon to Warsaw – for a new phase in my autism and mythology project. This is because I shall be presenting on my work to date...
Friday, 27 April 2018

HOMEWORK! For: 'At every crossroads' - Introducing a Hercules themed resource pack for use with autistic children

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In a few weeks’ time, I shall be heading to Warsaw for a programme of workshops, beginning on 14 May, in connection with the project O...
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Susan Deacy
London, United Kingdom
I am a classicist who researches and teaches ancient Greece, especially its mythmaking. This interest has led to various projects on deities and other personages and on what they meant in antiquity and what they have meant, and can mean, since then, including for autistic people. I have written several books, including one which presents a set of Hercules-themed activities for autistic children. For some of my initiatives, including around trying to diversify Classics, I won a National Teaching Fellowship (2015) and became a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2016). I hold several academic positions including at Bristol University where I'm currently Honorary Professor.
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